I think we need to hear from all sorts of users vs thinking about how we got into the sport.
Everyone here (mostly), myself included, is waaaay motivated and outside the norms. I just happen not to be motivated much by comps and more motivated by hunting. Don’t personalize this, either by looking at me or looking at how you got into shooting sports.
Remember, I’m not talking about succeeding against all resistance. I’m talking about increasing the pool of which competitors come from. There’s a billion non-competing golfers that make golf courses financially viable.
You absolutely need non-competitors playing at least sort of the same game to make a sport viable.
Without millions of hunters there would be very few rifles, shotguns, R&D, and all of the ammo that makes them work.
Imagine a target shooter, a benchrest guy, that has never hunted elk. Or hunted anything. Yeah he can practice hunting elk in his damn basement, buy different gear, research crap on YouTube, practice gutting an animal using a sack of potatoes (ha), but only the super, super motivated are going to do this.
Result? 400 people shooting elk.
What you want to do is lower the barrier to entry. Like hunter safety classes. Like youth hunting seasons that are earlier and adults can’t hunt then (obv, just spelling it out).
For a PRS-type sport, at minimum, it would help if a range have one stand, obv outside the range shed, with a placard outlining a typical PRS match. Next to the placard would be maybe three different objects to shoot off of. Various positions. Maybe 10ft wide? Maybe you can be the local “golf pro” that has occasional teaching sessions.
This would be the local crappy 9-hole golf course.
If you’re serious about growing the sport, you guys have to brainstorm, to risk saying silly things, and hear and entertain uncomfortable thoughts.
The current conditions are what brought PRS to its state it now sits in.
I've been involved in the shooting sports since 1999. Shotgun, rifle, and pistol. Everything has been tried. People without intrinsic motivation will not take the step no matter what you do. People with intrinsic motivation will find a way no matter what.
Sporting clays has a much, much broader reach than anything rifle. The same course that was used for the monthly NSCA match is usually left open to the public for at least a week after the match. The cross over from the general duffers and hunters to competition is minuscule. Always has been.
When NRA highpower rifle used to be a thing, my club would throw two clinics a year one in the spring and one in the fall. These clinics were staffed by the really good shooters in the club (Expert, Master, and High Master classification) and they would bring extra mats, rifles, ammo, spotting scopes, etc. The number of people coming to the clinics was never more than a dozen and we might be lucky if we saw ONE guy come back to a match.
If you placed that much effort into actually seeking a match and learning from it you would be much farther ahead than waiting until someone lays out the path for you.